What did you think of the part when Kvothe completely glossed over his trial? That seemed very odd. Will we see it in the last book? Why would Rothfuss spend so much of the book going into the minutiae of Kvothe's life and then totally gloss over this?
It seems like the sort of thing that really could be boring, and so he did not feel like bothering with it. On the other hand, sometime later in the book (I think when he first starts learning Yllish? ) he mentions how he learned the language of the church in a few days. So maybe there is more to the legends surrounding that trial than he let on?
I guess only time will tell, but for now I think I'm more inclined to take Kvothe's word for it than suspect him of hiding something secret and important.
/Review: Just finished Wise Man's Fear (some spoilers, toward the third paragraph (it's long ))
06/03/2011 08:17:55 PM
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*Spoilers*
06/03/2011 11:19:24 PM
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Not too sure... (spoilers, of course)
06/03/2011 11:33:23 PM
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Theories *SPOILERS*
07/03/2011 06:21:26 AM
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I stand by my comments below
07/03/2011 02:17:07 PM
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It's 6 books.
08/03/2011 12:52:38 AM
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I think I have to agree with kavorka
08/03/2011 10:04:52 AM
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Provided he parts with the University early
09/03/2011 05:37:08 AM
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